A better way to get your first 10 B2B customers
You’ve built a B2B product, and now you need some customers.
So, you scrape 7,000 emails of people who will be perfect users.
You load them up in your fancy email-sending-tool and write a solid cold email.
Then you press send, sit back, and start daydreaming about what it’s going to be like to raise a $50M Series A five months from now when all these deals close.
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The next morning, you wake from your Eight Sleep, hit your cold plunge, and move to your standing desk where you excitedly open your fancy-email-sending-tool dashboard:
7,000 emails sent.
“Good, good” you say to yourself.
27% open rate.
“Hmm, seems a little low, but we can work with that”
0.2% response rate.
You faint.
You’re awoken to your Apple Watch calling you an ambulance, and you quickly dismiss the notification.
“A point two percent response rate?! But, my email - it was so good. So perfectly generically interesting to these 7,000 leads. Do they not care? Do they not have a soul? Is something broken?”
–
Take a step back.
How many “generically-personalized” cold emails do you receive every day?
How many of those products have you actually bought in the last year?
For me, the answers are “lots” and “zero.”
So what makes you believe you’re going to be the one to break through this noise and scale and start landing sales?
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Here’s a different approach:
Wait, what?
No, really.
That’s your whole plan.
If you constrain your entire sales world down to 10 or 15 or 20 companies, you’ll start getting creative, and creativity is what you need to get people’s attention as a company that no one has heard of before.
Your mindset shifts from “well, that won’t scale” or “that will take too much time” or “that’s too expensive” to “I’ll do what I have to do to get someone there to notice me.”
Realistically, I think you can reliably get 2-6 meetings booked in the next 30 days with this approach.
领英推荐
One founder I work with just booked 7 meetings in the last 17 days by constraining his world to 20 companies, but your mileage may vary.
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Here’s (more tactically) what I would do:
Pull a list of 20 good-fit companies for your product
Set a realistic 30 day goal: “Generate initial conversations with 6 of these companies”
Build a list in Apollo/Zoominfo/etc. of all titles and contacts who might be a good fit at each company Ideally you’re listing 10+ contacts per company Connect with all of these contacts on LinkedIn Don’t send a connection message with the request (higher likelihood of them accepting the invite)
Map 1 or 2 creative tactics of how you’ll approach each company. How will you get their attention? This can (and should) be different company-by-company
Example:
Zapier
Contacts: Nikki + 11 other contacts
Tactics to try: Get an intro to Nikki from XYZ investor, etc.
Rippling
Contacts: Mike + 7 other contacts
Tactics: Ask Mike if I can interview him for an upcoming blog about X, Y, Z.
Pagerduty
Contacts: Aakash + 12 other contacts
Tactics: Send a plate of cookies to the office with a handwritten note
…and so on for all 10-20 companies on your shortlist
And you should get really wild with the tactics.
Your mindset should move from “I need to hit all of these prospects” to “If these companies were prospecting me, what would grab my attention?”
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A few ideas:
etc.
There are so many more here, but I’ve vowed to never have someone fall asleep while I’m discussing B2B sales tactics, so I’ll pause here.
Not all of these will work for you, or your industry, or your product, or your buyer.
But if you choose a couple of these and really try to nail them, the results are often much better than firing cold emails into the void and hoping for a sign of life.
Virtual Assistant, Social Media Management, Amazon Wholesale Product Researcher
4 周Cold emailing a huge list can feel like shouting into a void—you're putting in effort but not getting anywhere. It’s way better to focus on a few key companies that truly matter and get creative with your outreach. Using MailsAI to track your email efforts can really help you see what resonates. That way, you’re more likely to grab their attention!
A wonderful article. Full of actually useful information while being captivating and just the right length. I thoroughly enjoyed reading it.
Product Manager | Product Owner | Helping startups build & scale tech products & team
6 个月In 2024, personalized content is crucial. With people receiving numerous emails and calls daily, it’s the high-quality, personalized messages that truly stand out and capture attention, hitting the jackpot.
CEO at Stacker
6 个月Getting out into the world, having random conversations, and asking for the order (the order is intros to prospects) is so underrated. Also… sometimes asking for 15/20 minutes to get feedback is easier then a straight pitch… and can turn into deals if your product is great.
Founder @ Feather (YC S22) | Building voice AI agents for lenders and fintechs
6 个月If cold emails were written like this article by Chris Bakke (instead of the 3 step drip campaign), my inbox unread would be 0